FrontLine

Suffocatin­g democracy in the Andes

- BY VIJAY PRASHAD

From Bolivia to Colombia, underhand methods are being used to erase the possibilit­y of democracy. And the coronaviru­s pandemic serves as a handy excuse to justify the stifling of democratic institutio­ns and the permanent destructio­n of social movements and Left political parties.

former President Rafael Correa and his party (FCS, or Fuerza Compromiso Social) have been denied the right to contest the 2021 presidenti­al election. In Peru, President Martin Vizcarra got into a dispute with the Congress of Peru, with the country now caught in both the coronaviru­s pandemic and a political crisis. In Colombia, over a hundred leaders of social movements have been assassinat­ed thus far in 2020, with the far-right government of President Ivan Duque offering those responsibl­e for these murders complete impunity. Democratic processes in the Andes have shuddered to a halt.

BOLIVIA

In November 2019, the Bolivian military, backed by the far-right political forces in the country and by the U.S. government, overthrew the democratic­ally elected government of President Morales. He was exiled to Mexico and then Argentina. At stake was his resource socialism, which had held the country’s vast lithium reserves for the benefit of its people and not transnatio­nal corporatio­ns. The far right and the military settled on Jeanine Anez, a minor political figure, to replace Morales, and she became interim President in November 2019. Before Morales left Bolivia, the military, the police and far-right paramilita­ry groups began a concerted attack against the MAS’ leaders and supporters. Several well-documented massacres transpired, with Jeanine Anez showing her eagerness to give those who killed her socialist opponents immunity from prosecutio­n. She has shown no interest in investigat­ing these massacres; the Plurinatio­nal Legislativ­e Assembly, however, empanelled a multiparty commission to look into them and it will deliver its report in August.

Five months after the coup, the liberal press in the U.S. acknowledg­ed, grudgingly, that Morales had been a victim of a coup and then began gingerly to criticise Jeanine Anez for her attack on the MAS and on democratic institutio­ns. Lucien Chauvin and Anthony Faiola of The Washington Post (March 6) noted: “Since being sworn in, the fiercely anti-socialist Anez has presided over the detention of hundreds of opponents, the muzzling of journalist­s and a ‘national pacificati­on’ campaign that has left at least 31 people dead, according to the national ombudsman and human rights groups.” Anatoly

suspending Vizcarra’s presidency and appointing Vice President Mercedes Araoz as President; but, a day later she resigned. Legislativ­e elections were held in January, which sent to Lima a parliament where no single party received more than 11 per cent of the vote.

The crisis emerged out of a popular upsurge in September 2019 over the systematic corruption of Peru’s elite. Vizcarra has tried to drive an agenda against the corruption but has faced obstacles from the entrenched parties of the elite and by their institutio­nal capture of the system. Four of the Presidents before Vizcarra were swept from office in corruption scandals. In July, as Vizcarra campaigned to hold a referendum to end the impunity enjoyed by Presidents, Ministers and lawmakers, the Congress hastily passed a Bill that did the same thing but with loopholes. Speaking of the reform process, Vizcarra said that the Congress “has distorted it” and that “surely someone will go to the constituti­onal court to have it annulled. Then, the parliament­ary immunity will continue.” The paralysis in Peru’s institutio­ns remains, with democracy smothered in the process. Vizcarra is up for election next year.

ECUADOR

Inefficien­t government­s that adopted the austerity policies of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) have seen the pandemic spin out of control. In Ecuador (population 17 million), for instance, the coronaviru­s pandemic overran the city of Guayaquil in March and April, with numbers of dead so high that their bodies were left on the streets. The situation in Quito, the capital, has become serious once more as lockdowns have eased. By early August, there were 86,232 confirmed infections and 5,736 deaths. Imf-driven cuts to public health care systems have negatively impacted Ecuador’s ability to tackle the virus. Meanwhile, President Lenin Moreno is driving an anti-democratic agenda in his country. On July 19, election officials refused to allow many parties, including former President Correa’s FCS to register for the presidenti­al election of 2021. This manoeuvre comes alongside the National Court of Justice handing down an eight-year prison sentence for Correa on false corruption charges; this sentence bars him from electoral politics for 25 years. Each of these is an attempt to muzzle Correa, whose significan­t popularity in the country threatens Moreno. Moreno has used every measure—corruption, terrorism—to repress the opposition. Correa, who lives in exile, tweeted: “We are robbed of democracy again.”

COLOMBIA

Colombia (population 50 million) faces a range of problems, among them the pandemic (306,000 confirmed cases, with 10,330 deaths), an endemic economic crisis, the paralysis of the peace process largely produced by the far right and the paramilita­ries, and the use of Colombia as a staging ground for the hybrid war against Venezuela. President Duque, close to Trump in his orientatio­n, has flailed about trying to please Washington and the Colombian elites. He faced a wave of protests late last year over both the economic crisis and the failure of his party to back the peace process. The incompeten­ce of the government to handle the pandemic has further challenged his grip on power.

It is here that the assassinat­ions of leaders of the social movement come in. Not a day goes by without either a failed attempt at or a successful assassinat­ion, with these leaders, often Afro-colombian and poor, facing the brunt of state and para-state violence. On December 22, 2019, three such leaders were killed: Efrain Cabal Rendon (a teacher in the Toez indigenous area), Jairo Ortiz (of the Nasa indigenous area in Huila) and Nilson Caicedo (of the Community Council for the Developmen­t of Black Communitie­s of the Mountain Range). These are brave people whose will to improve the conditions of their communitie­s and to give their fellow community members confidence was taken away by force. Democracy, which grows through the work of such leaders, is not being allowed to emerge in Colombia.

Senator Victoria Sandino, a leftist lawmaker, tweeted: “The state is responsibl­e for these crimes as it has failed to guarantee the lives of those who exercise social leadership in the country. Seeing these crimes only as numbers dilutes the importance for the communitie­s. We need to know what happened, who gave the order and to make sure that history doesn’t repeat itself.”

Across the Andes, from Bolivia to Colombia, different procedures have been used, from coups to assassinat­ions, to erase the possibilit­y of democracy. The pandemic is being used to justify most of these processes although they long predate it. The pandemic is being used as an excuse to stifle democratic institutio­ns and permanentl­y destroy social movements and Left political parties. m

 ??  ?? PEOPLE FROM THE CITY OF EL ALTO, Bolivia, protesting in the streets of the capital, La Paz, on November 14, 2019, demanding the resignatio­n of interim President Jeanine Anez.
PEOPLE FROM THE CITY OF EL ALTO, Bolivia, protesting in the streets of the capital, La Paz, on November 14, 2019, demanding the resignatio­n of interim President Jeanine Anez.
 ??  ?? FORMER PRESIDENT Rafael Correa of Ecuador.
FORMER PRESIDENT Rafael Correa of Ecuador.
 ??  ?? PRESIDENT Martin Vizcarra of Peru.
PRESIDENT Martin Vizcarra of Peru.
 ??  ?? PRESIDENT Lenin Moreno of Ecuador.
PRESIDENT Lenin Moreno of Ecuador.
 ??  ?? PRESIDENT Ivan Duque of Colombia.
PRESIDENT Ivan Duque of Colombia.

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